DNA packaging and ejection forces in bacteriophage

Citation:

J Kindt, Tzlil, S, Ben-Shaul, A, and Gelbart, W.M. . 2001. “Dna Packaging And Ejection Forces In Bacteriophage”. Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America, 98, Pp. 13671-13674. doi:10.1073/pnas.241486298.

Abstract:

We calculate the forces required to package (or, equivalently, acting to eject) DNA into (from) a bacteriophage capsid, as a function of the loaded (ejected) length, under conditions for which the DNA is either self-repelling or self-attracting. Through computer simulation and analytical theory, we find the loading force to increase more than 10-fold (to tens of piconewtons) during the final third of the loading process; correspondingly, the internal pressure drops 10-fold to a few atmospheres (matching the osmotic pressure in the cell) upon ejection of just a small fraction of the phage genome. We also determine an evolution of the arrangement of packaged DNA from toroidal to spool-like structures.